Mars has four distinct seasons, and may well be the planet in our Solar System having seasons the closest in general to ours.
Venus, it is slightly smaller, and much hotter
Phobos does not have seasons like Earth does because it is tidally locked to Mars, meaning the same side always faces the planet. This results in a consistent temperature on the surface of the moon.
The planet, within our solar system, that has nearly the same diameter as Earth, is Venus.
Venus is most similar to Earth in terms of mass and diameter. Venus is almost the same size as Earth, with a diameter about 95% that of Earth, and its mass is about 81.5% of Earth's mass.
Its most likely that they do. Any planet with an axial tilt will have seasons throughout its orbit. Eclipses of orbiting moons are also likely to occur on these exoplanets, though it would be rare to find an orbiting moon that is almost the same apparent size as the star - as with Earth.
That's because Mars has an axial tilt which is almost the same as the Earth's. A planet's axial tilt is the most important factor in determining the seasons.
Venus has almost the same mass as Earth.
Earth.
Venus because it is almost the same size as Earth.
Mars is the planet that has a tilt axis similar to Earth's, with Mars having a tilt of about 25 degrees compared to Earth's 23.5 degrees. This similarity in tilt axis is one reason why Mars experiences seasons similar to Earth.
it is mars it has water
mars
Venus, it is slightly smaller, and much hotter
it's almost the same ... but earth's is a little bit more
I assume you mean "planet". That would be Venus.
Phobos does not have seasons like Earth does because it is tidally locked to Mars, meaning the same side always faces the planet. This results in a consistent temperature on the surface of the moon.
no planet